Google Gemini is getting better at identifying AI fakes

AI Summary2 min read

TL;DR

Google Gemini now helps users detect AI-generated images by asking 'Is this AI-generated?' It plans to expand to video, audio, and C2PA credentials for broader AI tool verification, including from OpenAI's Sora.

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Google GeminiAI-generated contentC2PASynthIDcontent verification

Google is making it easier for Gemini users to detect at least some AI-generated content. From today, you’ll be able to use the Gemini app to determine if an image was either created or edited by a Google AI tool, simply by asking Gemini “Is this AI-generated?”

While the initial launch is limited to images, Google says verification of video and audio will come “soon,” and it also intends to expand the functionality beyond the Gemini app, including into Search.

The more important expansion will come further down the line, when Google extends verification to support industry-wide C2PA content credentials. The initial image verification is based only on SynthID, Google’s own invisible AI watermarking, but an expansion to C2PA would make it possible to detect the source of content generated by a wider variety of AI tools and creative software, including OpenAI’s Sora

Google also announced that images generated by its Nano Banana Pro model, also revealed today, will have C2PA metadata embedded. It’s the second bit of good news for C2PA this week, after TikTok confirmed it would use C2PA metadata as part of its own invisible watermarking for AI-generated content.

Manual content verification in Gemini is a useful step, but C2PA credentials, and other watermarks like SynthID, won’t be truly useful until social media platforms get better at flagging AI-generated content automatically, rather than putting the onus on users to confirm for themselves.

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